Hi all,
I'm using BeautifulSoup to parsing an HTML page and find it refused to
parse the page. By looking at the backtrace, I found it is a problem
with the python built-in HTMLParser.py. In fact, the web page I'm
parsing is with some Chinese characters. there is a tag like <img
src=/foo/bar.png alt=中文> , note this is legacy html page where the
attributes are not quoted. However, the regexp defined in
HTMLParser.py is :
attrfind = re.compile(
r'\s*([a-zA-Z_][-.:a-zA-Z_0-9]*)(\s*=\s*'
r'(\'[^\']*\'|"[^"]*"|[-a-zA-Z0-9./,:;+*%?!&$\(\)_#=~@]*))?')
Note that the Chinese character (also any other non-english
characters), so it fire an error parsing this. I'm not sure whether
the HTML standard allow un-quoted non-ASCII characters in the
attributes. If it allows, this seems to be a bug. and the regexp to
better be [^>\s] IMHO.
BTW: It seems something like :
<script>
var st = "<a></";
</script>
can not be parsed. :-/

Re: the BTW -- < and > should be entity-escaped when used in attribute
values inside tag attributes... (but are probably seldom found as part
of tag attribute values)
But the example you showed is not an attribute in a tag, but rather text
within a paired tag.
But your suggestion for the regexp seems correct to me, if the non-ASCII
characters are permitted for non-quoted attribute values.

The attached patch changes the regex to allow non-ascii letters in attribute values (using \w with the re.UNICODE flag instead of [a-zA-Z0-9_]).
Using [^>\s] (or even [^> ]) might be OK too, since that's what browsers seem to use (e.g. Firefox and Chrome show "テ＜ス＀☃ト -d－fg" as title of '<a href="" title=テ＜ス＀☃ト -d－fg href="">foo</a>', including the non-ascii spaces in the middle).

The HTML 4.01 specifications says[0]:
"""
In certain cases, authors may specify the value of an attribute without any quotation marks. The attribute value may only contain letters (a-z and A-Z), digits (0-9), hyphens (ASCII decimal 45), periods (ASCII decimal 46), underscores (ASCII decimal 95), and colons (ASCII decimal 58). We recommend using quotation marks even when it is possible to eliminate them.
"""
The HTML 5 draft says[1]:
"""
The attribute name, followed by zero or more space characters, followed by a single U+003D EQUALS SIGN character, followed by zero or more space characters, followed by the attribute value, which, in addition to the requirements given above for attribute values, must not contain any literal space characters, any U+0022 QUOTATION MARK characters ("), U+0027 APOSTROPHE characters ('), U+003D EQUALS SIGN characters (=), U+003C LESS-THAN SIGN characters (<), U+003E GREATER-THAN SIGN characters (>), or U+0060 GRAVE ACCENT characters (`), and must not be the empty string.
"""
So maybe [^>\s] is a little too permissive here.
[0]: http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/intro/sgmltut.html#h-3.2.2
[1]: http://dev.w3.org/html5/spec/Overview.html#attributes-0

Here's a patch that matches unquoted attribute values according to the HTML5 specifications.
The regex uses \s even if this includes the \v char that, according to the HTML5 specs, shouldn't be included. I left it there for simplicity and backward-compatibility, and also because it's a rather obscure corner case.

With 3.2 the situation is more complicated because there is a strict and a non-strict mode.
The strict mode uses:
attrfind = re.compile(
r'\s*([a-zA-Z_][-.:a-zA-Z_0-9]*)(\s*=\s*'
r'(\'[^\']*\'|"[^"]*"|[-a-zA-Z0-9./,:;+*%?!&$\(\)_#=~@]*))?')
and the tolerant mode uses:
attrfind_tolerant = re.compile(
r'\s*([a-zA-Z_][-.:a-zA-Z_0-9]*)(\s*=\s*'
r'(\'[^\']*\'|"[^"]*"|[^>\s]*))?')
This means that the strict mode doesn't allow valid non-ASCII chars, and that tolerant mode is a little too permissive.
The attached patch changes the strict regex to be more permissive and leaves the tolerant regex unchanged. The difference between the two are now so small that the tolerant version could be removed, except that re.search is used instead of re.match when the tolerant regex is used.

The goal of tolerant mode is to accept anything a typical browser would accept. I suspect that means the tolerant regex should stay, but I don't remember the details.
As for the strict....as far as I know the current module follows 4.01, not 5. I'm not sure what should be done about that.

I don't see many use cases for the strict mode. It is not strict enough to be used for validation, and while parsing HTML I can't think of any other case where I would want an exception raised (always as long as what is parsed by the tolerant mode is a superset of what is parsed by the strict mode).
If the parser is still able to parse what it was parsing before, I wouldn't worry too much about backward compatibility, because I can't imagine a valid use case where people would want the parser to fail (maybe someone else can?).

I would agree if the HTMLParser was compliant with the HTML 4.01 specs, but since it's more permissive and uses its own heuristic to determine what should be parsed and what shouldn't, I think it's better to use already existing heuristics (either the HTML5 ones or the ones used by the browsers).
I.e., I'm not trying to make it HTML5 compliant, just to make it work with what works on the browsers.

We need not base changes to html/parser.py on html5 spec, but rather make changes based on the requirements on parsers which may rely on this library. Like the tolerant mode was brought in issue1486713 for some practical reasons and it was seen useful tor parsers.
I don't know, how common is leaving out quotes for attributes is, but I think it can become really confusing to parsers (custom parsers). If we had not supported non-quote attributes I think, it is still okay still to not-to-support unless presented with case as very concrete bug. (like spec html 4.1 allows, which I see it does not).
The patch which added support for non-ascii characters is fine.

> So is the issue7311-3.diff patch fine?
Just that it allows unquoted attrs for unicode too.
My previous suggestion was not to allow unquoted attribute values, but as the change is already made in 2.7 and discussion pointed out a portion in 4.1 spec which allows unquoted attrs for ASCII, it seems fine. html/parse.py will be bit more permissive than what the spec says.
> It changes the strict regex to match the 2.7 one, and leave the tolerant one unchanged.
That is fine.

On 3.2 the patch changes only the range of chars matched by the regex when the attribute value doesn't have quotes and strict=True.
The parser already allowed unquotes attribute values even before the patch (in both strict and tolerant mode), but used an explicit list of allowed chars that was limited to the ASCII range.